King Tommen Baratheon memorably jumped to his death in Game of Thrones season 6, but a number of different factors played a part in his suicide.
The Tommen Baratheon death in Game of Thrones season 6 finale may have been by his own hand, but Tommen’s suicide was sparked by circumstances beyond the sudden death of his wife. Callum Wharry played the youngest son of Cersei Lannister until the role of Tommen was recast with Dean-Charles Chapman for season 4. Tommen emerged as the heir to the Iron Throne shortly afterward, but the pressures of his family and the surrounding tension among Westerosi powers eventually got the best of the young king. The Tommen Baratheon death came in episode 10 of season 6, and is one of the most tragic endings for a Game of Thrones character.
Tommen seemed a more compassionate ruler than Joffrey, even showing admiration for the black sheep of House Lannister, his uncle Tyrion. However, he was still just a small boy who was afraid and unsure leading to him being manipulated by anyone who could get their claws into him. This especially included his family members like Cersei and his grandfather Tywin Lannister. Over time, he also became a pawn to Margaery Tyrell and the High Sparrow. Without any sense to look out for himself or see the threats surrounding him, it’s not much of a surprise that Tommen’s reign as king on Game of Thrones was short-lived — but that didn’t make Tommen’s death any less shocking.
What Happened To Tommen In Game Of Thrones
The Tommen Baratheon death was preceded by the character becoming more active in Game of Thrones season 4. Like his siblings, Tommen was secretly the product of a sexual relationship between Cersei and her twin brother, Jaime Lannister. He was present for the wedding ceremony between Joffrey and Margaery Tyrell, and the subsequent funeral after his older brother’s death. Although inexperienced and naive, Tommen was crowned the next Lord of the Seven Kingdoms. After Joffrey’s dramatic death, Margaery shifted her focus to Tommen as a way to realign the powerful families. They soon married, but conflict quickly arose when Cersei grew jealous of Margaery’s influence on her son and gave the High Sparrow more power.
After the Faith Militant arrests Margaery and her brother Loras, Cersei’s plan to separate her son from the Tyrells backfired, leading to her own capture and walk of atonement. Tommen became more and more brainwashed by the High Sparrow and his religious sect. Despite abolishing trial by combat, Cersei was still set to be tried for her crimes. As the trials were set to begin, Cersei orchestrated a wildfire explosion at the Great Sept, killing thousands including Margaery. After witnessing the disastrous event, Tommen took off his crown and killed himself by walking out of his bedroom window. The death of Margaery was a factor in Tommen’s suicide, but the actions of his mother were a bigger piece of the puzzle.
How The Lannisters Caused Tommen Baratheon’s Suicide
In many ways, the Tommen Baratheon death felt inevitable. Almost everyone encountered Tommen in Game of Thrones manipulating him in some way. Margaery seduced him when he was in a vulnerable state, while his mother also tried to keep control of him. Even the High Sparrow knew he was a gullible young man who could be used to push the Faith of the Seven. Of course, the death of Margaery results in an immense amount of grief, but this played second-fiddle to the trauma of growing up a Lannister.
Tommen had recently lost his only siblings, and those deaths occurred shortly after the death of his supposed father, Robert Baratheon. The fact that his mother knowingly killed thousands of innocent people in King’s Landing, including the woman he loved, was unfathomable for Tommen. With the realization that his newfound faith was a lie and that he had nobody left to turn to, the young king felt like he had no other option but to end his own life. It definitely made for one of the most abrupt deaths throughout Game of Thrones.
Tommen’s Death Fulfilled Cersei’s Tragic Prophecy In The Show
An ominous prophecy shown in Game of Thrones season 5 was fulfilled by the Tommen Baratheon death. In the premiere episode of season 5, “The Wars to Come,” a flashback is shown during which Cersei seeks out the help of a witch named Maggy the Frog. After demanding that the woman predict her future, the witch winds her a harrowing tale that ends up shaping Cersei’s backstory and prophecy. She states, “You will be queen, for a time. Until there comes another, younger and more beautiful, to cast you down and take all that you hold dear.” Maggy then went on to say, “The king will have twenty [children], you will have three. Gold will be their crowns, and gold their shrouds.”
In life, the only thing that Cersei Lannister really cares about is her children, meaning that they will be what is taken away. Joffrey is killed by poison, Myrcella is also killed by poison out of revenge for Oberyn Martell, and then Tommen kills himself. The deaths of all three of her and Jaime’s children ultimately fulfills the prophecy, and their shrouds are, in fact, golden. In the Game of Thrones books, Maggy the Frog also predicts that Jaime could be the one to kill Cersei in the future, but this never comes to pass. Ultimately, the moment Tommen takes his own life fulfills this prophecy, and in extremely upsetting circumstances befitting the tone of Game of Thrones.
The Cinematography Made Tommen’s Death Unforgettable
Game of Thrones season 6, episode 10, “The Winds of Winter” was directed by Miguel Sapochnik, who also directed some of the best Game of Thrones episodes, and handles the scene when Tommen dies in an unforgettable way. As Tommen sits in his quarters, he views from afar Cersei’s destruction of the Red Keep and is informed of Margaery’s death. As an attendant tells him that he’s “very sorry, your grace,” the shot sees Tommen facing the window, with his back turned to the camera.
The shot doesn’t change as the attendant leaves, and Tommen briefly walks offscreen to remove his crown. He then walks back to the window, where the camera had been focusing on the whole time. Without a word, the young king steps forward, and Tommen dies by calmly walking out the window. It’s a gracefully executed scene, one that Game of Thrones fans won’t soon forget. The destruction of the Red Keep had happened mere moments before, which in itself was an incredibly bombastic scene that featured a major character’s death.
The scene where Tommen kills himself is a quiet lease meant to juxtapose the previous one and complement a quiet death with a dramatic one. Despite its subdued nature, showing Tommen’s suicide still shocked Game of Thrones audiences to the core. As the last of Cersei’s children died, and she is pronounced Queen of the Seven Kingdoms, but this isn’t why Tommen’s suicide still lingers as a memory — it’s the masterful way this moment was delivered to audiences by Sapochniik.
What Tommen Baratheon Actor Dean-Charles Chapman Thinks Of The Death Scene
The Tommen Baratheon death on Game of Thrones might have been a shock to the audience but actor Dean-Charles Chapman has his own thoughts on his characters’ death. Looking back on Tommen’s demise (via Cosmopolitan), Chapman describes how there were many takes of the now-famous fall from a variety of angles and he admits that “I took a lot of face-plants.” Although it likely wasn’t the most enjoyable scene to perform multiple times, the take that they did choose was an ideal one as it is an almost emotionless final act from the young king.
In terms, of the reactions to Tommen’s death, Chapman was particularly surprised by how Cersei took the news. After her emotional breakdown at having lost Joffrey and Myrcella, Chapman jokes that he was a little offended that Cersei seemed uncaring about the death of her remaining son and simply pushed past it on her way to the throne. While it is easy to dismiss Cersei as cold-hearted at this moment, it suggests Tommen’s death hit her harder than the other children as she had no more grief to give and even signals a more ruthless change in her. It also suggests that, given that her actions led to Tommen killing herself, she couldn’t admit to herself that she was devastated.
Looking at the legacy Tommen left behind, Chapman’s main concern was for Ser Pounce, Tommen’s beloved pet cat. Although Ser Pounce is never seen again in the series following Tommen’s death, Chapman hopes the cat was able to live happily in the Red Keep and find another cat to have kittens with. While it is a nice thought, hopefully Ser Pounce leaves King’s Landing before Daenerys arrived in Game of Thrones season 8.
Kings Dying Early Is A Common Trend In Westeros
The Tommen Baratheon death seemed to mark a very short reign, but Game of Thrones highlights that sitting on the Iron Throne was not likely to lead to a long life. Indeed, Joffrey Baratheon’s reign wasn’t much longer than his younger brother’s as he took power at the end of season 1 and died a young man at the beginning of season 4. Even those who simply held the title of king were not long for the world as the War of the Five Kings ignited after the death of Robert Baratheon and all five of those kings were dead by season 6.
Even Daenerys Targaryen, the person most fans wanted to see take the Iron Throne, only held it for less than a day before she was assassinated by Jon Snow. At the end of Game of Thrones, Bran Stark is named king, seemingly stepping into the role at a more peaceful time which could ensure a longer reign. Indeed, in House of the Dragon, King Viserys managed to reign for 26 years of prosperity before his death ignited a violent era. The Westerosi king who held the longest reign was Jaehaerys I Targaryen who was on the throne for 55 years, putting Tommen and other Game of Thrones kings to shame.